Presentation + Paper
15 March 2019 Morphological image processing for multiscale analysis of super-resolution ultrasound images of tissue microvascular networks
Ipek Özdemir, Kenneth Hoyt
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Diabetes is a major disease and known to impair microvascular recruitment due to insulin resistance. Previous quantifications of the changes in microvascular networks at the capillary level were being performed with either full or manually selected region-of-interests (ROIs) from super-resolution ultrasound (SR-US) images. However, these approaches were imprecise, time-consuming, and unsuitable for automated processes. Here we provided a custom software solution for automated multiscale analysis of SR-US images of tissue microvascularity patterns. An Acuson Sequoia 512 ultrasound (US) scanner equipped with a 15L8-S linear array transducer was used in a nonlinear imaging mode to collect all data. C57BL/6J male mice fed standard chow and studied at age 13-16 wk comprised the lean group (N = 14), and 24-31 wk-old mice who received a high-fat diet provided the obese group (N = 8). After administration of a microbubble (MB) contrast agent, the proximal hindlimb adductor muscle of each animal was imaged (dynamic contrast-enhanced US, DCE-US) for 10 min at baseline and again at 1 h and towards the end of a 2 h hyperinsulinemiceuglycemic clamp. Vascular structures were enhanced with a multiscale vessel enhancement filter and binary vessel segments were delineated using Otsu’s global threshold method. We then computed vessel diameters by employing morphological image processing methods for quantitative analysis. Our custom software enabled automated multiscale image examination by defining a diameter threshold to limit the analysis at the capillary level. Longitudinal changes in AUC, IPK, and MVD were significant for lean group (p < 0.02 using Full-ROI and p < 0.01 using 150 μm-ROI) and for obese group (p < 0.02 using Full-ROI, p < 0.03 using 150 μm-ROI). By eliminating large vessels from the ROI (above 150 μm in diameter), perfusion parameters were more sensitive to changes exhibited by the smaller vessels, that are known to be more impacted by disease and treatment.
Conference Presentation
© (2019) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ipek Özdemir and Kenneth Hoyt "Morphological image processing for multiscale analysis of super-resolution ultrasound images of tissue microvascular networks", Proc. SPIE 10955, Medical Imaging 2019: Ultrasonic Imaging and Tomography, 1095505 (15 March 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2511974
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CITATIONS
Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Image processing

Image enhancement

Tissues

Ultrasonography

Image analysis

Analytical research

Super resolution

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